An amateur detective in a small town with his romantic interest as a sidekick is most definitely not my cup of tea, but this one is all right. Nothing exceptional about it, but also nothing awful, except the prolonged ending with a whodunit resolution that one figures out five chapters in advance.
Our main man can be annoying at times with all his wisecracking, but that shit was still within my tolerance limits. His aspiring journalist, wanna-be girl Friday, is cool, and not at all some dumb blonde bimbo who would throw herself at our guy. In fact, it is he who tries to impress her. The plot is simplistic, but still decent. Some characters are dull, but some are great (see the 'Bad Guy' section of the facts below). No femme fatales, but there is one nicely bitchy dame. Cops are neither totally stupid nor completely absent.
It has a naive quality and would probably be best suited for the so-called young adult market these days. It's not scarce on eBay and is pretty affordable, so if you have teenage kids around that you want to corrupt with pulp fiction, you may consider gifting this paperback. They would appreciate more Raymonds and Dashiells and the like. Also, it wouldn't be a bad way to start a collection with such a badass cover.
Quick, forgettable read. I speculate that this reflected in sales, as this seems to be the only thing published by Mr Gregory. However, it deserves its place in the digital world. If nothing else, check out the killer cover!
3/5
Facts:
She was a beautiful girl, and if I said that her figure made the De Milo Venus look like a handful of unbaked hot cross buns, it would be only the simple truth. She had green eyes and shoulder-length hair that could have been used to advertise St. Petersburg, Florida, the Sunshine City. All the art in the Metropolitan Museum couldn’t have decorated the office with greater effect than Libby.
She had the kind of figure that made you think of all the other expensive things in the world you couldn't afford either. Her skin was clear golden tan, not the mahogany that looks so well on Duncan Phyfe tables and terrible on women. Her face had a slim, remote loveliness, like that of a beauty in the court of Louis XIV who had remained untouched by the passing of a hundred lovers.
I revised my first impression of her. She had the voice and body of a sultry courtesan, but her eyes reminded me of the dark gleam of the spring of a bear trap.
"Honey," I said, "all the police would get would be the briefcase. I want the killer. We both know he considers me fair bait. I don't think a man who murders people should get away with it. I'll drop a few hints around, once I have the loot, and the murderer will come to me. I won't have to look for him."
Why are you holding out? You asked for a hundred thousand and I'm moving heaven and earth to get it together. You can have it any way you want—in redheads, dollar bills or yachts. You name it and it's yours. Don't say anything now. You're hot. Think it over for a day. Think it over for a couple of days. But let's get it settled. I'm going crazy.
Something came down heavily across the back of my neck, driving me forward and down to my hands and knees. From a far distance I heard a tiny scream from Libby. I tried to call to her, but my voice sounded like the echo of a tinkle. I was again on my feet, reeling in a tarry blackness. I stumbled and my forehead struck something that exploded in a brilliant fountain of sparks, like a skyrocket.
Light stabbed into my brain with a thousand blades. I closed my eyes and groaned. My head felt like the inside of a bass drum during the St. Patrick's Day parade.
Whereupon a ton of bricks fell on my head.I didn't exactly pass out. I know that because I can still remember the stars I saw and the blaze of incandescence that let me know someone had switched on a lamp.